Out of the Ashes, a Family Rises Again
The August 2015 Tianjin explosion claimed 173 lives, and the 24-year-old firefighter Pang Ti was one of them. That disaster at a chemical warehouse, caused by mismanagement and lax oversight, put his parents Pang Fangguo and Fang Zhiying among the more than one million “shidu” families in China. Shidu means “losing the only,” and refers to the loss of only children—many of whom were born during the 36 years of China’s one-child policy. Since their son’s death, Pang and Feng, both in their late 40s, have not been working and have been living off government compensation from the explosion. In late 2015, they decided to try in vitro fertilization (IVF) despite its high cost and low rate of success.
Changjiang Daily photographer Jia Daitengfei began following the couple in early 2017 as they tried and failed multiple times to conceive. “You could feel the pain in their home buried underneath quietness,” Jia says. “The television volume was low, they talked quietly, they walked quietly, and when they cried, they cried in silence.”
In May, Fang got pregnant with twins, and she gave birth in December. In February 2018, Jia photographed the twins next to their deceased brother’s uniform. Jia said he would take the same family photo next year as well. —The Editors